i just purchased the tc helicon voice works (blue rack mount) and I'm having some trouble connecting it to my preamp (PreSonus eureka rack mount). i was wondering if i could connect my mic to the preamp and the preamp to the tc helicon.
Comments
ok, so i stopped by guitar center today to ask them how to set u
ok, so i stopped by guitar center today to ask them how to set up my tc helicon and this is what they've told me; use a 1/4 cable wire and connect that from the line input of the tc helicon into the line input of the preamp. connect a dual 1/4 cable wire into the balanced outputs (LEFT/Right) of the tc helicon and into the presonus firebox audio interface 3 / 4.
guess what? it still does not work.
Im wondering why you need a separate pre-amp with that unit? T
Im wondering why you need a separate pre-amp with that unit?
TC Helicon VoiceWorks Vocal Processor Features:
* HybridShift harmony generation for smooth, natural sound
* 4 independent harmony voices, 4 distinct harmony modes: scale, chord, shift, and MIDI notes
* 2 lead-voice thickening voices one above, one below
* Humanization of harmony voices using FlexTime, vibrato, inflection, pitch randomization, and portamento
* T.C. Electronic compressor/gate
* T.C. Electronic reverb/tap-tempo delay
* Song mode for live performance allows you to save internal sequences of up to 50 songs with 30 user presets per song
* MIDI CC control over all parameters
* Selectable equal-tempered and just tuning for harmonies
* HarmonyHold
* Scale-based pitch correction for studio and live performance
* Fully adjustable gender and voicing per voice
* High-quality mic preamp with 48V phantom power
* TC Electronic 3-band EQ plus low cut
You should be able to go straight into your interface. I'm under the impression that daisy chaining pre-amps is not recommended.
What did the manual read to do in this situation? http://www.tc-
What did the manual read to do in this situation?
http://www.tc-helic…
After I read it, I'm currently wondering if my pre is still working as I may have sent a +48v shot into one of these items?
I guess backwards compatible doesn't apply here.
good chance that the phantom supplys will be fine resistively co
good chance that the phantom supplys will be fine
resistively coupled which should handle even a short circuit
and
with consistent wiring +v will connect with +volts and so NO potential difference and NO current flow
BUT
The phantom stuff later.
this question/thread is also over in the Recording Studio forum
(Dead Link Removed)
he owns 3 units and there is many, many valid ways to make use of them
but the language and syntax of the descriptions are all over the place
inputs to inputs
outputs to outputs
inputs ... to outputs
please
an output to an input
he has the Voice Works because it was bought after the Eureka
and seems to want to use it as an effect unit
this WILL require the ability to set up a send, return configuration in the software mixer
... I don't know which software he is using
the FireBox interface is a 2 input and 6 output firewire device
http:// (tc helicon voice works)
http://www.presonus… (presonus eureka)
http://www.presonus… (presonus firebox with firewire)
chicity wrote: i just purchased the tc helicon voice works (blue
chicity wrote: i just purchased the tc helicon voice works (blue rack mount) and im having some trouble connecting it to my preamp (presonus eureka rack mount). i was wondering if i could connect my mic to the preamp and the preamp to the tc helicon.
It would work either way, but the best way (I think) would be to connect it to the Eureka first. That way the sound that gets processed in your voiceworks is already compressed and amped.
Katelyn Benton
kbenton@presonus.com
kbenton wrote: [quote=chicity]i just purchased the tc helicon vo
kbenton wrote: [quote=chicity]i just purchased the tc helicon voice works (blue rack mount) and im having some trouble connecting it to my preamp (presonus eureka rack mount). i was wondering if i could connect my mic to the preamp and the preamp to the tc helicon.
It would work either way, but the best way (I think) would be to connect it to the Eureka first. That way the sound that gets processed in your voiceworks is already compressed and amped.
Katelyn Benton
kbenton@presonus.com
I'm assuming that the Voiceworks has a line input which it does not appear to. With all due respect, would it not be better to just plug the Voiceworks directly into the Firebox Line input and eliminate the secondary preamp altogether? To me it sounds like you're planning to overdrive the one of the preamps of which there are potentially three if you include the one in the Firebox.
no takers?
no takers?